Sharanya S. Bettadapura , William D. Todd , Graham R. McGinnis , Danielle R. Bruns
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The age of the U.S. population is increasing alongside a growing burden of age-related cardiovascular disease. Circadian rhythms are critical for human health and are disrupted with aging and cardiovascular disease. The goal of the present review is to summarize how cardiac circadian rhythms change with age and how this might contribute to the increasing burden of age-associated heart disease. Further, we will review what is known about interventions to slow aging and whether they impact cardiac clock function, as well as whether time-of-day or chronotherapy may improve cardiac function with age. Although much remains to be understood about the circadian biology of cardiac aging, we propose that altered circadian clock output should be considered a hallmark of aging and that efforts to fix the clock are warranted for healthy cardiac aging.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology publishes work advancing knowledge of the mechanisms responsible for both normal and diseased cardiovascular function. To this end papers are published in all relevant areas. These include (but are not limited to): structural biology; genetics; proteomics; morphology; stem cells; molecular biology; metabolism; biophysics; bioengineering; computational modeling and systems analysis; electrophysiology; pharmacology and physiology. Papers are encouraged with both basic and translational approaches. The journal is directed not only to basic scientists but also to clinical cardiologists who wish to follow the rapidly advancing frontiers of basic knowledge of the heart and circulation.